Some see a contradiction in an executive-branch agency facilitating abroad the very kind of energy exploration President Obama opposes domestically.
No one has accused Soros of wrongdoing, but some say the transaction does not pass the SMELL test.

The oil industry has been on a hot streak this year, thanks to a series of major discoveries that have rekindled a sense of excitement across the petroleum sector, despite falling prices and a tough economy.

Christopher Steiner, author of $20 PER GALLON, paints a sobering picture for our civilization. You may view this 86 minute compelling film “Blind Spot” by Adolpho Doring and Amanda Zackem: http://www.snagfilms.com/films/title/blind_spot/

Using E. coli bacteria and inositol phosphate, a chemical analogue of a cheap waste material from plants, researchers at Birmingham University have recovered uranium from the polluted waters from uranium mines.

Magma was set up in January 2008. Its acquisition of the HS Orka stake is the largest foreign investment in Iceland since the collapse of its banking sector in 2008.
The agreement provides that a Magma wholly owned subsidiary will purchase the int

At one time, as a kid, I flipped a dime to the cashier to watch Vincent Price scare the heck out of me at a movie. I pulled out a nickel to pay for a Snickers candy bar. I bought a hamburger for 15 cents. I bought a school lunch for 35 cents. When

A newly released work called Making Algae Biodiesel at Home is
the quickest and easiest way to learn about algae biodiesel. Inside
this comprehensive work you'll get over 600 pages of gold-mine info.
Absolutely everything anyone interested in algae biodiesel would need.

"Today we stand at a precipice." Then-Senator Barack Obama told an audience in Racine, Wisconsin last year, "If we are able to reduce carbon emissions and build a sustainable future, our children will benefit for generations."
The future President has stated that environmental policy will be one of the cornerstones of his tenure in the White House. In order to reduce pollution caused by carbon dioxide, President Obama has pushed for various pieces of legislation, including the Cash for Clunkers bill and the so-called Cap and Trade provisions.
Both candidate and President Obama has stated that a paramount goal would be to reduce American need for foreign sources of fuel.
Many of the efforts to reduce energy consumption are well-known to the American people. These include turning off lights when not in a room, insulating buildings, and raising mileage standards for automobiles. However, one small proviso has many within the Defense Department and in Congress infuri

Norwegian oil and gas giant StatoilHydro has inaugurated the world's
first floating full-scale offshore wind turbine, paving the way for
deep-water wind farms possessing the dual appeal of being out of sight
as well as more efficient.

The turbine, known as Hywind, towers 213 feet above the waterline,
but the steel spar on which it is mounted plunges another 328 feet
below the surface, where it is anchored to the sea floor by three
stabilizing cables. The spar is filled with water and rocks to provide
ballast that keeps the turbine from capsizing in rough seas. Located
about six miles off of Karmoey near the country's southwestern
coastline, Hywind will serve as a test bed for offshore technologies
over the next two years as engineers work on getting the cost of Hywind
down and figure out how best to develop even larger deep-water turbines.

First Solar just signed an agreement with China to build the biggest
solar power plant yet, according to a statement released today by the
company. The 2-gigawatt plant in the Mongolian desert will generate
enough electricity to power three million homes.

That's a heck of a lot of cadmium telluride, the semiconductor they use for their thin film cells.

The largest solar plant currently in operation is a mere 60-megawatt plant in Spain, according to pvresources.com.

First Solar and China officially signed a memorandum of
understanding, which is still up for final negotiations. The plan is to
start building a 30-megawatt phase this summer, adding more and more
until the final phase is complete in 2019.

Earlier this year, First Solar became the first company to produce
solar cells at less than a dollar per watt, crossing the boundary
thought to make solar power competitive with traditional energy sources.

A printing technique that could stamp out features just tens of
nanometers across at industrial scale is finally moving out of the lab.
The new roll-to-roll nanoimprint lithography system could be used to
cheaply and efficiently churn out nano-patterned optical films to
improve the performance of displays and solar cells.

Nano press: This 10-by-30-centimeter plastic sheet (top) has
been patterned with a series of nanoscale polymer lines using
roll-to-roll nanoimprint lithography (bottom). The film is iridescent
because of the way its nanoscale features scatter light.
Credit: ACS Nano

Nanoimprint lithography uses mechanical force to press out a
nanoscale pattern and can make much smaller features than optical
lithography, which is reaching its physical limits. The technique was
developed as a tool for miniaturizing integrated circuits, and a
handful of companies, including Molecular Imprints of Austin, TX, are still developing it for this applicat

The Japanese government is prepared to spend some 2 trillion yen on a one-gigawatt orbiting solar power station—and
this week Mitsubishi and other Japanese companies have signed on to
boost the effort. Boasting some four kilometers of solar panels—maybe
of the superefficient Spectrolab variety but more likely domestically sourced from Mitsubishi or Sharp—the space solar power station would orbit some 36,000 kilometers above Earth and transmit power via microwave or laser beam.

According to project leaders, the massive undertaking will be able to supply power to the entire African continent, with enough left over to sell to Europe.
When the Grand Inga Dam is completed, it is expected to have an output of about 39 000 MW, making it one of the biggest hydroelectric projects in the world.
The first phase of the scheme will be the construction of the Inga Three hydroelectric plant, expected to generate about 5 000MW of electricity, which, according to research, will provide electricity to five countries by 2015.
Inga Three will draw water from the existing Inga One and Inga Two.
Its design consists of eight parallel tunnels of 6 770m in length and 13.3m in diameter. Each tunnel will support two turbines, of 270MW each

Remember it was reported here BO gave money to Brazil and Petrobus that his financier (soros) from Move On had recently invested and stands to make $$$ One has to wonder how long they have known about this HUGE new discovery? The story
Petroleum firm BP announced Wednesday that it has made a “giant” discovery in the Gulf of Mexico.
“BP announced today a giant oil discovery at its Tiber Prospect (well) in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico,” the firm said in a statement.
"The Tiber well was drilled to a total depth of approximately 35,055 feet making it one of the deepest wells ever drilled by the oil and gas industry."BP operates Tiber, where it has a 62 percent share, along with Brazilian firm Petrobras, with 20 percent, and US group ConocoPhillips with 18 percent.

I was just watching Jodie and Marc walking through the hemp field and I thought it would be a good time to share my hemp ethanol research with y'all!
In this day of oil wars, peak oil (and the accompanying soaring prices), climate change and oil spills such as the Exxon-Valdez, it's more important than ever to promote sustainable alternatives such as hemp ethanol.
Hemp turns out to be the most cost-efficient and valuable of all the fuel crops!
And as it turns out, the whole reason for hemp prohibition - and alcohol prohibition - may have been a fuel monopoly!
So check out my hemp ethanol research ... and leave your comments here so I can find out what you think! Here's the link:
http://hemp-ethanol.blogspot.com/

Worldwide demand for rare earths, covering 15 entries on the periodic table of elements, is expected to exceed supply by some 40,000 tonnes annually in several years unless major new production sources are developed. One promising U.S. source is a rare earths mine slated to reopen in California by 2012.

Solar cells soon could be painted onto the sides of buildings or
rooftops with nanoparticle inks, according to one chemical engineer.

The new nano-ink process could replace the standard method of manufacturing solar cells, which requires high temperatures and is relatively expensive, said Brian Korgel of the University of Texas at Austin.

Enough natural gas to heat every home in North Dakota through at least
two brutal winters was burned off as an unmarketable byproduct in the
state's oil patch in 2008. North Dakota produced a record 62.8 million barrels of oil last year,
up nearly 18 million barrels from 2007. Natural gas, a byproduct of oil
production, was pegged at 86 billion cubic feet — of which 26 billion
cubic feet was "flared" because of the lack of collecting systems and
pipelines needed to move it to market.

The nation's biggest government utility plans to boost its base rates again in October. At the same time, the TVA board will consider a proposal to change its quarterly fuel cost adjustment to one that changes rates according to fuel costs every month.

Turning the sun's heat into electricity--by concentrating it with thousands of mirrors onto a tower.

In southern California's Antelope Valley, 24,000 silver-bright
mirrors have been positioned to reflect light on two 50-meter-tall
towers. And at 11:08 A.M. local time Wednesday, this concentrated light
heated steam in those towers to turn a turbine—the first "power towers" in the U.S. to convert the sun's heat into electricity for commercial use.

Dubbed Sierra SunTower, the power plant can produce five megawatts,
enough to power roughly 4,000 local homes at full capacity—and provide
the modular blueprint for larger plants in California and New Mexico,
according to eSolar, the Pasadena start-up behind the power plant.

"We call this a commercial demonstration," says eSolar senior vice
president of engineering Craig Tyner. "A 46-megawatt commercial design
will incorporate 16 of these towers, two of which we have at

Silicon Valley’s electric car company, Tesla Motors,
says that it hit profitability in July. The private company reports
that it made “approximately $1 million of earnings” on revenues of $20
million, and that it shipped 109 Roadsters, its $109,000 all-electric
sports car. The revenues reflect GAAP accounting standards and are only
for the month of July.

Founder and CEO Elon Musk predicted in June that the company would soon hit profitability at the end of a lengthy blog post dealing primarily with a lawsuit brought on by Tesla’s ousted co-founder Martin Eberhard. In June, Tesla was also awarded a $465 million loan from the Department of Energy, which will help it manufacture its more reasonably priced Modern S sedan.

The $20 million in revenues and $1 million in profits do not reflect any proceeds from that loan, the company tells us.

The construction is the start of a vast experiment, an attempt to
create the world's first car-free, zero-carbon-dioxide-emissions,
zero-waste city. Due to be completed in 2016, the city is the
centerpiece of the Masdar Initiative, a $15 billion investment by the
government of Abu Dhabi, which is part of the United Arab Emirates. The
new development, being built on the outskirts of Abu Dhabi city, will
run almost entirely on energy from the sun and will use just 20 percent
as much power as a conventional city of similar size. Garbage will be
sorted and recycled or used for compost; sewage will be processed into
fuel. Concrete columns will lift the city seven meters off the ground,
creating space underneath for a network of automated electric
transports that will replace cars. Planners predict that the
development will attract 1,500 clean-tech businesses, ranging from
large international corporations to startups, and--eventually--some
50,000 residents.

General Fusion's reactor design consists of 220 pistons that
simultaneously ram a metal sphere. This creates a shock wave inside the
sphere, so that plasma rings in the center create a fusion reaction.

But the first detailed assessment of more than 800 oil fields in the world, covering three quarters of global reserves, has found that most of the biggest fields have already peaked and that the rate of decline in oil production is now running at nearly twice the pace as calculated just two years ago.

Our new boy on the poster, Sen Charles Grassley of Iowa, doesn’t have
the worst overall record of Repubs or Dems but he has, by virtual of
his longevity in Congress, reached a position where he has been able to
influence enactment of some of the most damaging legislation to our
freedoms and well-being. The ethanol disaster is one and now, Obama’s
plan to take over healthcare has Grassley in position to enable Obama’s
power grab. He’s working on a “compromise” that he says won’t concede
the entire health care system of the USA to the State –just a part of
what is left in the free market. Government already controls about half
of healthcare through Medicare and other federal programs. Where is
THAT in the US Constitution? Who benefits from a FedGov command of
health care for each and every one of us commoners? Note that all of
the plans offered so far by the Obama regime exempts royalty --federal
officials and Congress-- from the restrictions and regulations.

Packers Plus's multistage fracturing drilling technology has opened up major new supply basins in Canada and the United States, potentially unlocking hundreds of trillions of cubic feet of new gas reserves in places like Horn River, Louisiana, Pennsylvania and even Quebec